Study Reveals Prevalent Mistreatment of Malaria Sufferers
By Kate Woodsome
May 22, 2003
The Cambodia Daily
Health officials working to
teach malaria patients how to treat their disease are facing an even grater
challenge than a misinformed public. Results of a major drug-use study shows
that few drug providers are treating patients with effective medicine, and many
others are not treating people at all.
"Community Drug Use Practices in Malaria in Cambodia," a cross-sectional study
of 1,400 villagers and 150 drug providers and health care workers conducted in
October 2002 and released this year, indicates that few malaria patients receive
the combination drug therapy recommended by the Ministry of Health and World
Health Organization
A combination of anti-malaria drugs is said to be more effective than
monotherapies, which are prone to drug resistance, said National Malaria Center
Director Dr. Doung Socheat.
But 92 percent of those who said they received single artemisinins at both
public and private facilities did not receive mefloquine, the study showed. And
87 percent of those received artemisinins separately at public or NGO health
care facilities did not receive mefloquine.
"This could cause resistance very quickly," Duong Socheat said.
Fifty-eight percent of those who received quinine, the second most popular malaria treatment, at all facilities did not receive tetracycline. Of those who received quinine at public or NGO facilities, 70 percent received it without a form of tetracycline, the study said.
Prescribers widely recommended artemisinins and quinine monotheraphy for short durations, a practice that could encourage drug resistance, since the prescribed dosage is ineffective for ensuring treatment, the study said.
"Generally [health care facilities] don't treat the cases properly because of lack of knowledge. In the remote areas, there are very few qualified staff," said Dr. Ros Seyha, technical adviser to the National Malaria Control Program.
Minimal knowledge about
malaria has led many health care workers to provide patients with ineffective
treatment before referring them to other clinics, he said. Vitamin injections or
a mix of inappropriate drugs can make people more sicker than they were to begin
with, he said.
The survey showed that 25 percent of health care providers said they would refer
simple cases of malaria to other services.
"This might not be an accurate number, since some providers are afraid to say they have anti-malaria drug or have offered ineffective therapies," Ros Seyha said.
Seventy percent of drug providers said they would refer severs cases of malaria to other clinics. Ros Seyha attributed this high number to the fear health workers have to treating the patients.
TheUS-based Management Sciences for Health, the World Health Organization. and the European Commission Malaria Control Project conducted the survey in Battambang, Pailin, Preah Vihear and Pursat provinces.